Klement Jug

Klement Jug

Klement Jug (19 November 1898 - 11 August 1924) was a Slovene philosopher, essayist and mountaineer who died tragically while climbing mount Triglav. Although he did not publish many works during his lifetime, he became one of the most influential thinkers of the younger generations of Slovenian intellectuals in the interwar period.

Life

Jug was born in a wealthy peasant-merchant family in the village of Solkan near Gorizia in the County of Gorizia and Gradisca of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (now a suburb of Nova Gorica). He frequented the grammar school in Gorizia and then enrolled at the University of Ljubljana where he studied philosophy under the supervision of the Slovene phenomenologist philosopher France Veber. A fervent reader of Kant, Nietzsche and Freud, Jug developed his own philosophy based on the supremacy of the will and the unappealable adherence to ethics and personal responsibility.

Since young age, Jug also practiced extreme alpinism, in which he saw a way to practice the effort self-control. In one of his solitary exursions to the Julian Alps, he died by falling from the northern cliff of mount Triglav.

Legacy

Jug left very little written works. During his lifetime, he published only a few essays, while several philosophic and ethical reflections have been found as manuscripts after his death and published posthumously by his closest friends. Nevertheless, his influence has been relatively big. He was considered to be the ideological leader of the younger generations of Slovene students from the Julian March, the western Slovenian region which came under Italian administration after World War One. These youngsters rejected any compromises with Italian Fascist and urged for a radical and organized resistance against the policies of Fascist Italianization. Many of them found in Jug the source for their intellectual and personal inspiration.

Among Jug's direct disceples were the famous novelist Vladimir Bartol and Zorko Jelinčič, one of the co-founders of the militant anti-fascist organization TIGR. Already in 1925, the two organized the first seminar dedicated to Jug's memory in the village of Krn near Kobarid, in which they discussed the issues of Jug's voluntaristic world view. Due to the effort of Jug's collegues, his posthumous fame spread in the intellectual circles of interwar Slovenia. The list of his admirors included the author, politician and diplomat Anton Novačan, the poet Oton Župančič, the playwrights Pavel Golia and Ivan Mrak, and the poet and political activist Edvard Kocbek.

Many prominent Slovene thinkers and artists have published their reflections over Jug's fate, including the literary critic Josip Vidmar, the novelist Vladimir Bartol, philosopher Milan Komar, essayist Jože Javoršek, and philosopher and literary critic Taras Kermauner. Jug has also influenced the strong Slovenian mountaineer subculture and the literature which emerged from it; authors who have been influenced by Klement Jug include Igor Škamperle and Dušan Jelinčič. The controversial Slovenian psychologist and therapist Janez Rugelj also wrote on Jug, taking him as a positive example of a self-made man. The sociologist Lev Milčinski, on the other hand, analyzed Jug's as an example of a self-destructive and suicidal personality.

In 1988, the writer and playwright Drago Jančar portraited Jug in the played "Klement's Fall" ("Klementov padec"). In 2006, a documentary on Klement Jug was filmed and broadcoasted on the Slovenian National Television. A popular Alpine refuge in the upper Soča Valley is named after him.

Sources

*Marko Klavora, "Ljubezen in hrepenenje po večnosti: osebnost Klementa Juga" ("Love and the Yearning for Eternity: the Personality of Klement Jug"; Ljubljana, 2006);
*Branko Marušič, "Dr. Klement Jug : 1898-1924" (Ljubljana & Nova Gorica, 1998);
*Polona Puc, "Klement Jug v slovenski literaturi" ("Klement Jug in the Slovenian literature"; Ljubljana, 2007);
* [http://www.rtvslo.si/odprtikop/dokumentarci/mit-klementa-juga/ The script of the documentary on Jug on the Slovenian National Broadcast]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Vladimir Bartol — Infobox Writer name = Vladimir Bartol caption = birth date = birth date|1903|2|24|mf=y birth place = Trieste, Austria Hungary (now in Italy) death date = death date|1967|9|12|mf=y death place = Ljubljana, Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia… …   Wikipedia

  • Dušan Jelinčič — (born in Trieste 1953) is an Slovene writer, essayist and mountaineer from Trieste, Italy. He was born in an influential Slovene intellectual family in Trieste; his father, Zorko Jelinčič, was among the co founders of the militant anti fascist… …   Wikipedia

  • November 19 — << November 2011 >> Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 1 2 3 …   Wikipedia

  • TIGR — TIGR, abbreviation for Trst (Trieste), Istra (Istria), Gorica (Gorizia) and Reka (Rijeka), was an anti Fascist insurgent organization, active in the 1920s and the 1930s in the eastern Italian region known as the Julian March.The organization,… …   Wikipedia

  • Nova Gorica —   Town and Municipality   …   Wikipedia

  • Ozeljan, Nova Gorica — Ozeljan …   Wikipedia

  • Julius Kugy — (19 July 1858 5 February 1944) was a Slovene mountaineer and writer. Biography Julius Kugy was born in Gorizia, then part of the Austrian Empire (now in Italy) to Slovene parents. His father was a Carinthian Slovene whose original surname was… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Slovenian mountain climbers — A list of notable mountaineers from Slovenia:A* Aljaž Anderle, (1973 ) * Urban Ažman, (?) * Tomislav Aurednik, (1977 )B* Tina Di Batista, (1975 ) * Klemen Bečan, (?) * Zoran Bešlin, (?) * Stane Belak Šrauf, (1940 1995) * Jani Bele, (?) * Andreja… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Slovenian philosophers — A list of important Slovene philosophers:*Hermann of Carinthia (cca. 1100 1160) *Aleš Ušeničnik (1868 1952) *France Veber (1890 1975) *Klement Jug (1898 1924) *Janez Janžekovič (1901 1988) *Ludvik Bartelj (1913 2006) *Cene Logar (1913 1995)… …   Wikipedia

  • Dornberk — Dornberk …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”